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Stef Benstead

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Let justice roll like a river, righteousness like a never-ending stream

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    • Apr 29, 2019
    • 4 min

    Interpreting disability in light of Scripture – part two

    This is the second of two posts based on an article by the BBC entitled “The Disabled Christians reinterpreting the Bible”. The gist of the article is that disability is not a negative thing and may well be present in heaven. This immediately set my alarm bells ringing. I’ve come across this approach to theology of disability on twitter and at a course for making church more accessible to all disabled people (we discussed this idea, but the course itself and the conclusion of

    • Mar 5, 2018
    • 3 min

    The meaning of rest: part two

    A while ago I wrote about rest. I wasn’t sure how it could be fitted in with the necessarily busy lives that many, particularly those with young families and/or elderly parents, lead. It seems foolish and impossible to suggest that people actually stop doing some necessary things in order to make space to rest. And then my mum became ill. She had, early in the New Year, felt that God was asking her to take a step back. But she genuinely didn’t know how, given her commitments

    • Sep 18, 2017
    • 2 min

    Redemption of pain

    This post is in response to an article shared with me by a good friend. The other posts in this series are The Experience of Pain; Pain in our Culture; Hard-heartedness; and Suffering and Character. Emlet asks the question, “What is your ultimate goal in dealing with chronic pain? Is it to remove pain? Or to redeem pain? Is it to take away pain? Or to transform pain? Or is it a little of both?” On the redemption of pain, I am completely with him. This is exactly what makes un

    • Sep 18, 2017
    • 2 min

    Suffering and character

    This post is in response to an article shared with me by a good friend. The other posts in this series are The Experience of Pain; Pain in our Culture; Hard-heartedness; and The Redemption of Pain. Suffering and character Suffering shapes our character, in line with the three responses outlined in the post on hard-heartedness. Suffering may make us hard, as a result of our hardness on ourselves. When we choose this option, we become like the Pharisees, rigid in the face of su

    • Sep 18, 2017
    • 4 min

    Hard-heartedness

    This post is in response to an article shared with me by a good friend. The other posts in this series are The Experience of Pain; Pain in our Culture; Suffering and Character; and The Redemption of Pain. One of the things that struck me most when reading the article was the impact on me of seeing my experience through a sympathetic outsider’s eyes. I’m used to seeing my life through the eyes of people or groups who don’t believe me; who think that I, along with many other pe

    • Sep 18, 2017
    • 3 min

    Pain in our culture

    This post is in response to an article shared with me by a good friend. The other posts in this series are The Experience of Pain; Hard-heartedness; Suffering and Character; and The Redemption of Pain. Emlet says, “some cultures expect suffering and learn not to fear it; other cultures suffer less but fear it more.” My defences immediately raise! I don’t want to consider that I make my suffering worse through inappropriate fear. I think the issue is more subtle than that – cu

    • Sep 18, 2017
    • 3 min

    The experience of pain

    A good friend recently asked my opinion on an article on a Christian response to pain. This and the next four blog posts have come from my reflections as I read the article. The others are on Pain in our Culture, Hard-heartedness, Suffering and Character, and The Redemption of Pain. The experience of pain Pain itself can be an intensely isolating experience; there is no reference point for pain outside of one’s self, which makes it difficult to know whether a person – includi